Readers are reminded the following press release has been prepared by people who work for the legislators........
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This past week at the General Assembly
STATE HOUSE — Here are the highlights from news and events that took place in the General Assembly this week. For more information on any of these items visit http://www.rilegislature.gov/pressrelease
§ Legislation introduced to expand personal finance education in public schools Sen. Sandra Cano (D-Dist. 8, Pawtucket) and Rep. Joseph McNamara (D-Dist. 19, Warwick, Cranston), at the behest of General Treasurer Seth Magaziner, introduced legislation (2019-H 5033) that will expand the teaching of personal finance in Rhode Island's public high schools. The legislation would require all public high schools to offer a class that includes personal finance beginning in the 2019-2020 school year, and would require students to demonstrate proficiency in personal finance by the 2021-2022 school year. Click here to see news release.
§ Rep. McNamara submits school reform, attendance bills Click here to see attendance release.
§ Rep. Solomon bill would prohibit development on State House grounds
§ Legislation would mandate the creation of a Text-to-911 emergency system
§ Sen. Raptakis to resubmit line-item veto inspector general bills Sen. Leonidas P. Raptakis (D-Dist. 33, Coventry, West Greenwich, East Greenwich) will be reintroducing two pieces of legislation that would establish an Office of Inspector General and give voters the chance to vote on a constitutional amendment granting the governor the power to utilize a line-item veto in the state budget. Click here to see news release.
§ Rep. Millea introduces bill that caps classroom size to 20 for grades K-2 Rep. Christopher T. Millea (D-Dist. 16, Cranston) has introduced legislation (2019-H 5047) that would mandate public school classroom sizes be limited to 20 students for kindergarten through grade two classes. Exceptions to the class size limit could be made for emergencies and temporary situations that do not exceed more than three days. Mid-year enrollments when it would be impractical, educationally unsound, or disruptive to student learning to not assign the student to an existing class of maximum size are also classified under exceptions to the proposed legislation. Click here to see news release.
§ Speaker Mattiello, President Ruggerio attend Small Business Economic Summit Speaker Nicholas A. Mattiello (D-Dist. 15, Cranston) and Senate President Dominick J. Ruggerio (D-Dist. 4, North Providence, Providence) attended the Rhode Island Small Business Economic Summit at Bryant University’s Student Center. It was an opportunity to hear directly from small business owners and advocates about the various issues and challenges that confront them. Seven groups met to cover the topics of tax and budget, health care, economic development, Main Street issues, workforce development, regulations, and emerging markets.
§ Rep. Edwards selected for opioid policy fellows program
§ Sen. Euer, Rep. Carson part of national effort to block offshore drilling Sen. Dawn Euer (D-Dist. 13, Newport, Jamestown) and Rep. Lauren H. Carson (D-Dist. 75, Newport) joined legislators from seven other states in a united effort to protect our coasts by announcing legislation that they will file to ban drilling off Rhode Island’s shore. The legislation would limit any new offshore drilling capabilities off Rhode Island’s coasts. Click here to see news release.
§ Senate Finance Committee has first meeting, hears auditing presentation
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For an electronic version of this and all press releases published by the Legislative Press and Public Information Bureau, please visit our Web site at www.rilegislature.gov/pressrelease.
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